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tv   CBS This Morning  CBS  June 3, 2016 7:00am-9:01am EDT

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captioning funded by cbs goenchlg it is -- good morning, it is friday, june 3rd, 2016. welcome to "cbs this morning." a violent and bloody scene on the campaign trail. protester attack supporters of donald trump. he says hillary clinton should go to jail. she says trump could start a nuclear war. rescuers search for u.s. soldiers swept away by raging floodwaters in texas. at least five troops are dead. and a symbol of the american frontier recovers from near extinction. the unlikely comeback story of the bison in our series, "america the beautiful." we begin with a look at today's "eye opener," your world in 90 seconds. at least five soldiers were killed when their army troop
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carrier was swept away by floodwaters. >> a desperate search for missing soldiers at ft. hood. >> with the continuing downpour, we will face sustained challenges. texas will be there by your side. supporters were taunted and attacked outside a rally california. >> he started following me. >> even if i weren't in this race, i'd be doing everything i could to make sure trump never becomes president. >> after what she said in her phony speech -- i will say this, hillary clinton has to go jail, okay? she has to go jail. the shooting at ucla now a double murder across two states. in minneapolis, a list was located that had professor klug's name on it and the name of the female victim. in nashville, a navy blue angels f-18 crashed and burst into flames. the pilot was killed. no, no, no. the death of prince self-induced but accidental. an overdose of a pain medication. chaos in an ohio courtroom
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when a father charged his daughter's killer. all that -- >> warriors take game one courtesy of the event. this little boy had never been on a roller coaster. his mom recorded his reaction. >> what the hell? all that matter -- >> president obama spoke at the air force academy graduation. >> you have more than earned your unofficial motto, forged in fire and tempered in ice, which is a great motto. although it does sound like something out of "game of throne." >> on "cbs this morning." have you ever been downloading something on line and halfway through froze and couldn't go anywhere? think steph curry's puberty. >> westbrook look like jar-jar binks? i don't know who that is, but sure. >> pretty sure reggie miller's ears provide wi-fi. oh, my god! they do!
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welcome to "cbs this morning." the already-bitter fight between donald trump and hillary clinton has reached a whole new level. a day that began with clinton blasting trump ended with demonstrators attacking his supporters. it happened after a trump event in san jose. protesters punched rally-goers, kicked their cars, and burned trump's signature baseball caps. during that rally, trump hammered clinton for calling him unprepared and unfit for the white house. >> after what she said about me today and her phony speech -- that was a phony speech. that was a donald trump pit job. i will say this, hillary clinton has to go jail, okay. she has to go to jail. >> nancy cordes is in culver city, california, with clinton's new offensive. we want to go first to san jose,
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site of last night's trump rally. good morning. >> reporter: good morning. after trump's rally, protesters left the designated protest area and began to pursue trump supporters, sometimes forming menacing groups to harass and % intimidate them. at times, violent scuffles enshoed. unrest fueled by antagonism and divisive rhetoric on both sides. demonstrations turned violent again outside donald trump's evening rally. from supporters leaving the san jose convention center taunted and attacked by anti-trump protesters, many carrying mexican flags. yet another example of a country divided by what these californians view as hateful rhetoric from the presumptive gop nominee. >> latinos for trump. that's what i like. >> reporter: inside the rally, trump insisted hispanic voters will rally around him.
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>> we're doing well with the latinos. nobody knows about it yet. >> reporter: trump gave opponents more ammunition hours earlier, telling the "wall street journal" that an indiana-born judge presiding over a class-action suit against trump university had "an absolute conflict of interest because he was of mexican heritage." in march, house speaker paul ryan issued this warning to trump -- >> this party does not prey on people's prejudices. >> reporter: on thursday, ryan became the latest high-profile republican to line up behind him. >> my goal is to make sure that we're unified so that we're at full strength in the fall so we can win the election. >> reporter: last night, trump again used divisive rhetoric invoking race when recalling years' old tensions between the clintons and president obama. >> remember hillary clinton used to hate obama. bill clinton hated him. he called bill clinton a racist. do you remember that? >> reporter: house speaker paul ryan's endorsement was long
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await, but trump didn't even feel the need mention it to his rally crowd last night, focusing all of his attention on hillary clinton. interestingly, after trump's rally, clinton's campaign chairman, john podesta, took to twitter to denounce the violence visited upon trump supporters. >> that was tough to watch. thank you very much. hillary clinton says electing donald trump would be a "historic mistake." she held almost nothing back yesterday, calling donald trump unfit to lead and saying his foreign policy ideas make no sense. nancy cordes is in culver city outside los angeles where clinton supporters will gather in a few hours. good morning. >> reporter: good morning. trump did not take kindly to clinton's speech. he said if elected, he'll sick his attorney general on her, and that she should go to prison. the clinton camp says that's just more proof that he's too volatile to be entrusted with the nuclear codes or control of the military. >> i watched hillary, it was
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pathetic. >> reporter: the speech trump found pathetic was exactly what democrats had been waiting to hear. >> he is not just unprepared, he is temperaturemently unfit. >> reporter: he defended his temperament in san jose. >> my temperament is tougher and better than hers. >> reporter: he got worked up over clinton's use of a private e-mail server. >> she's guilty as hell. anything obama wants she's going forward with because you know why? she doesn't want to go jail. that's why, folks. >> reporter: hours before, clinton had given a 35-minute point-by-point critique of what she calls trump's dangerously incoherent ideas. >> they're not even really ideas. just a series of bizarre rants, personal feuds, and outright lies. [ applause ] >> reporter: she said he is too cavalier about u.s. alliances. >> nato is obsolete. >> reporter: even as he praises
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brutal dictators like vladimir putin and north korea's kim jong-un. >> he wiped out the uncle. he wiped thought one, that one. this guy doesn't play games. >> i will leave at the to the psychiatrists to explain his affection for tyrants. >> reporter: the former secretary of state argued trump is too erratic, too hot tempered for a job that requires a cool head. >> bragging, mocking, composing nasty tweets. i'm willing to bet he's writing a few right now. >> reporter: actually, he only sent two during the speech, accusing her of incompetence and reading poorly from the teleprompter. >> to watch her is like sominex. you hear of that -- sleep all night, bing. >> reporter: clinton's democratic opponent, bernie sanders, agreed with her assessment of trump but said clinton has her own weaknesses on foreign policy including her vote for the war in iraq and her support for regime change in libya which has had mixed
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results. >> all right, thank you. on "face the nation" this weekend, john dickerson talks with donald trump in california. this sunday on cbs. rescue crews in texas are searching good morning for four soldiers swept away in deadly flooding. five other troops from ft. hood died yesterday in a training exercise. their truck overturned at a water crossing. three were rescued and are in stable condition. rain continues to batter texas. rushing water swept away this suv. look at that. the driver and passenger were able to escape unharmed. much of the state remains under flood warnings and watches. david begnaud has more on the rescue effort. good morning. >> reporter: good morning. there was a limited search and rescue operation overnight here at ft. hood. since the drownings were first reported yesterday, the military's been using helicopters, rescue boats, and search and rescue dogs to try and find the missing military servicemen. in the area where they went
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missing, there was flooding caused by two days of heavy rain. this was a training mission, as charlie said. five soldiers are dead, and four still missing. ft. hood, 12 troops were inside of a tactical vehicle during a thursday morning training exercise when their 2.5-ton truck was washed away from a low-water crossing. the vehicle overturned, setting off a desperate search and rescue effort. so far the three soldiers rescue read in stable condition. heavy rains have battered central texas in the ft. hood area in recent days. a retired ft. hood soldier says in some cases training continues despite the weather. >> there has been a lot of times that i have been in the fwleeld it was rain -- field when it was raining. was there other routes i could take? how well did they know ft. hood? was that the only road they knew? there's so many variables. >> oh, my gosh, no, no! >> reporter: severe weather continues to ravage the lone star state. this driver in granbury near ft.
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worth sgrodrove into an overflo creek. the fast-moving water overtook the vehicle and pinned it against a tree. >> get out! get out! get out! >> reporter: the driver and passenger were able to climb out of the submerged vehicle unharmed. across texas, relentless rainfall and deadly flooding have prompted a disaster declaration in 31 counties. >> we will face sustained challenges for a few more days. and then we will be a part of the process of rebuilding the lives of individuals, of homes, of counties and community. >> reporter: the names of the servicemen who died have not been released yet. here's what the military is going do -- notify their family members, then wait 24 hours to release names to the public. we're told the military will give us an update within the next hour. >> all right, thank you very much. the famed blue angels will not fly this weekend as planned after a deadly accident.
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a blue angels jet crashed and exploded in a huge fireball yesterday during a practice run in tennessee. this is the first blue angels crash in nearly a decade. the pilot was marine captain jeff coos. he was killed. our michelle miller flew with him last spring. i remember this story. this must have very hard to hear. >> reporter: it was hard for me as well as vladimir duthier who also flew with him. when i met captain jeff kuss, he was living his dream. he was a decorated member of the military, he was friendly, steadfast, and inspired to help the next generation reach new heights. >> oh, no, no, no! >> reporter: a crash of a blue angel jet, part of the navy's elite flying force, was marked by a plume of black smoke and flames. the most famous flying squad in america was practicing for the great tennessee air show when the fa-18 hornet crashed just after 3:00 thursday afternoon
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near the airport in smyrna, tennessee. the five remaining jets landed safely, but captain jeff kuss was killed. he was piloting plane number six. >> here we go. are you excited? >> a little bid. >> yeah? >> reporter: last year, i had the privilege of being a passenger flying along with captain kuss. >> liftoff! >> whoo! >> reporter: he was exactly where he wanted to be. >> i got my pilot license when i was 17. i wanted to get in the military and fly the fastest, meanest thing they could give me. and this is it. the hornet is it. >> reporter: early thursday, the blue angels had a successful practice flight over nashville. just hours later, tragedy. as night fell in south american -- in smyrna, hundreds met and held candles in tribute to the fallen pilot. >> i smile every time i get in the jet. >> reporter: captain kuss told
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me he was proud to represent the navy and marine corps with excellence. >> i was once the little kid that we now see at the crowd line standing two-feet tall looking up at the skies. to have that dream realized and be here for subcommittee an absolute honor. -- for me is an absolute honor. >> reporter: jeff kuss was just 32. according to the blue angels, the colorado native was a married fourth two of children. the u.s. military and faa are investigating the crash. >> so sad. normally we see the stories but don't know the people. you know him. >> makes a difference. >> it does. >> any idea what happened? >> no idea. i mentioned to him that lever -- that lever. he said, i would only eject if everyone on the ground was safe. so we'll see. >> 32. wow. >> thank you. this is the aftermath of another military display crash earlier in the day. that happened near colorado springs. it was a member of the u.s. air force thunderbirds. he ejected before the f-16
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slammed into a field. it happened moments after he flew over the commencement ceremony for air force cadets and president obama was there speaking. the president then met the pilot before leaving colorado, shook his hand. thanked him for his service. a man who gunned down a ucla professor had what police say was a kill list. investigators this morning continue searching for the vehicle that mainak sarkar drove to the campus from minnesota. that is where officials made another grim find -- the body of his estranged wife. carter evans is at ucla as the professor's widow shares her grief after wednesday's terror. good morning. >> reporter: good morning, gayle. mainak sarkar left a no confidence vote scene of the shooting asking police -- a note at the scene of the shooting asking police to check on his cat. it was there that they found his kill list and another victim. [ siren ] when police swarmed the ucla campus to find shooter mainak sarkar, they also found a trail of evidence leading investigators to a second
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victim. sarkar, a former ucla graduate student, shot engineering professor william klug, and killed himself at klug's ucla office wednesday morning. during a search of sarkar's apartment in st. paul, minnesota, police found a kill list with three names -- professor klug, an unidentified ucla professor, and his estranged wife. she was found dead in her home. >> we believe at this point that she was deceased prior to the ucla shooting. >> reporter: police believe sarkar killed her before driving to los angeles to confront the two professors. he was only able to find one. >> certainly he had enough rounds of ammunition on him, enough -- two pistols. could have caused many more fatalities. >> reporter: sarkar, a ph.d. student, apparently harbored a grudge against professor klug whom he accused of stealing his computer code. in march he called the professor "a very sick person" and told
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other students, "be careful." criminal profilers say his behavior fits a distinct pattern. >> this shooter is what i call an injustice collector. and my sense is what we'll find is that this individual's life was falling apart, and he was blaming these two professors from years ago. >> he loved every single one of us -- >> reporter: hundreds of students gathered thursday night on ucla's campus to honor professor klug, a father of two. his wife issued a statement saying, "this is an indescribable loss. i will miss him every day for the rest of might have life." police say the two handguns that sarkar had with him were legally purchased in minnesota, and at least one was registered to him. charlie? >> thanks. iraq's army and its allies are moving this morning into the isis-held city of fallujah. new video shows government troops on the move toward the last isis stronghold in western iraq. retired general david petraeus discussed iraq on my pbs
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program, and the former sigh director talked about a timeline for recapturing cities held by isis. >> i think we are starting to win, without question. i mean, we're certainly making gains. and now in fact, it allows us and really requires us to focus on the real center of graphity in iraq, which is why this went wrong in the first place, which is iraqi politics. >> it is possible, possible that before this president leaves office they could retake fallujah, mosul, and raqqah? >> i don't know if i'd bet on that. two out of three wouldn't be bad, and that's not inconceivable. i wouldn't rule out raqqah i guess because you could see perhaps some collapse at some point. when they're cut off from their turkish supply lines, where they're encircled a bit more. we never rule that out, but -- certainly would want to see -- fallujah's going to go down on
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this president's watch. can mosul be taken down, as well, and what kind of pressure can you brooklyn bridge -- you can bring on raqqah? you can't just focus on this, you've got to keep a focus on the islamic state in libya that became worrisome and troublesome. you can't let the nascent islamic state in afghanistan develop critical mass. keep an eye on yemen and the rest. and by and large, there is a pretty coherent effort that is now ongoing, and it is starting to bear fruit. >> now, he believed that the president has ratcheted up things. and they clearly want to have specific objectives achieved before they leave office. >> stop isis in its tracks. >> right. >> interesting. thank you. a 7-year-old boy survives nearly a week on his phone a remote japanese forest. ahead, how his emotional parents are responding after abandoning their son as punishment.
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an autopsy shows prince died from the same painkiller blamed for a wave of deadly overdoses. >> ahead, the search for a reason why the pop star used that powerful drug. the news is back in the morning right here on "cbs this morning." james drove his rav4 some stranded enthusiasts.d... he shared his sandwiches. he rescued their rover. he observed their methods... ...and was invited to join the crew for the remainder of the mission. no. james left to discover new frontiers... ...and potable water. how far will you take the all-new rav4 hybrid? toyota. let's go places.
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>> good morning, aim brooke thomas. a fire critically injuries a mother and daughter. fire broke out about 5:30 the 3700 block of heifer lane, firefighters rescued little girl trapped in a back bedroom. offer duty officer here lives next-door, trying to rescue the child. >> now, let's get check on the eyewitness forecast, with meteorologist, katie fehlinger. >> good morning, bit of dreary ends to the week for sure, you have got a lot of clouds out there, even still couple of areas of fog, as well, more notably some rain that's pushing through. here's one of those dreary views of the school buses rolling through right on cue, outside pleasant valley middle and high school, maybe not the most pleasant scene to kick start the day but regardless look ahead in the eyewitness weather seven day in philadelphia we flirt with 80,
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pretty seasonable today with showers, basically dry tomorrow, but by sunday, it goes back downhill. pat? >> katie, dreary day, dreary roads, this is a look at the westbound schuylkill expressway approaching city avenue coming off the billion dollars. slow as it normally is on a friday around this time. also, the broad street line on the mass transit checklist some delays on oregon, at the oregon station, due to emergency track repairs, also, 422 eastbound at stowe, all lanes block, roads buckling there, fix that up, brooke, back to you. >> next update 7:55, up next next on cbs this morning, closer look at the opiat drugs that took the life of music icon prince. i'm brooke thomas, good morning. having acne...
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bruce lee would be proud. just one hard -- i bet you he grew up taking karate lessons. >> golden state coach steve kerr lost his cool last night in game one of the nba finals. cleveland was making a second half rally. kerr said it was better to take out his anger -- take his anger out on a white board than a player. the warriors regrouped with solid play off the bench. scored 20 points in the 104-89 victory. game two is sunday in oakland. what happened last night is the second team of the warriors beating the first team of the cavaliers. >> they were breathtaking to watch. listen, cleveland is not done as we know. >> do not count them out. >> it would be nice for cleveland and lebron, i guess it. the warriors are awful fun to
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watch. >> i stayed in it until halftime and then was like, i got to go bed. >> got to go. hit your clipboard when you're mad. welcome back to "cbs this morning." coming up this half hour, an autopsy confirms pop star prince died of an accidental overdose. questions remain over how the music icon obtained the prescription drug and why he was using it in the first place. the frantic search for a missing 7-year-old boy in japan is over. get this -- his parents abandoned him in the woods as a punishment. ahead, the dad's emotional reaction after learning his child is safe. time to show some of the headlines. this sad news -- the "washington post" reports that muhammad ali is hospitalized in the phoenix area with breathing problems. an ali spokesman said he's in fair condition and described his hospital stay as precautionary. the 74-year-old boxing great was last hospitalized early last year. he's suffered from parkinson's disease for more than three decades. "the plain dealer" in cleveland report on a father in a courtroom who attacked the man
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who murdered his daughter. van terry leapt across a table at michael madison during a hearing yesterday. madison reportedly taunted family members and smiled at them. he killed terry's 18-year-old daughter and two other women. madison was sentenced to death. "the cincinnati enquirer" report on whether there will be charges in the death of a gorilla at the cincinnati zoo and botanical garden. the family of the 3-year-old boy who found his way into an enclosure is under investigation. zoo officials killed the endangered ape. in response, the zoo is raising a fence by six inches. will be 3.5-feet tall. people are waiting to see what will happen. many people hope charges will not be leveled against the family. imagine the trauma that little enjoy going through. nobody's talking about that. and nobody wanted the gorilla to die -- >> like compounding the tragedy. and "the star-tribune" has the official cause of death for pop star prince.
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a report shows he died from an accidental dose of fentanyl, a powerful opiate painkiller. officials want to know why prince was using the drug. jamie yuccas is outside his paisley park estate in chanhassen, minnesota. good morning. >> reporter: good morning, charlie. one of the big questions now is whether or not prince had a prescription for fentanyl. and if not, how did he get it? ♪ >> reporter: on stage, his style was unique and recognizable. but prince's personal life was shrouded in mystery. ♪ purple rain purple rain ♪ >> reporter: thursday's autopsy results pulled back the curtain, confirming suspicions that drugs led to the death of the music legend. the one-page medical examiner's report says prince died from fentanyl toxicity. that it was self-administered,
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and his death was an accident. fentanyl is a powerful opioid typically prescribed to patients who have built up a tolerance to other pain medications. it's also flooding the illegal drug market. the drug enforcement administration reports an alarming spike in fentanyl-related overdose deaths and calls the drug a threat to public health and safety. >> 50 times stronger than heroin. 100 times stronger than morphine. >> reporter: dr. edwin salsitz, an addiction expert, says even people with prescriptions are prone to overdose. >> in the last ten years, the prescriptions for opioid analgesics have quadrupled. going along with that, so have overdose deaths. ♪ >> reporter: prince's friend and former fiancee, sheila e., told the associated press shortly after his death that he had hip and knee issues, a result of his lively physical performances. >> all the properties either of those opioids can be good. when misused, become bad.
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>> reporter: the day before his death, members of prince's inner circle initiated an intervention, calling on prominent california addiction doctor howard kornfeld. >> paisley park, 7801, person not breathing -- >> reporter: the next morning, prince was found unconscious in an elevator at his paisley park home by his staff. and cokornfeld's son andrew had taken a redeye to begin the recovery process. >> andrew's purpose in being there was to describe the recovery without walls program, to familiarize prince with that. >> reporter: the carver county sheriff's office is leading the investigation into prince's death. they will then have to determine if charges should be filed, and that could take months, gayle. >> all right. thank you very much, jamie. a 7-year-old boy in japan is safe this morning after fending for himself in the woods for nearly a week. amtrakato tanuka had been lost
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since saturday. the boy's parents had left the boy for days for misbehaving. that set off a massive search across japan. our newest correspondent and cbsn anchor, marirena ninan is us. welcome. >> thank you. the parents told japanese media their son wandered off as they were picking wild vegetables last weekend but later changed their story, reportedly telling police they'd left their son by the side of the road as punishment for throwing stones at people in cars. a remorseful father apologized in front of reporters at a japanese hospital friday morning. his son, yamato, arrived moments earlier on a stretcher after being found alive in a nearby forest. "my excessive behavior caused such pain to my son," he said. yamato had been missing since saturday. search teams including members
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of japan's self-defense forces combed miles of thick woods on japan's northern island of hokkaido, home to dangerous brown bears. six days later, he was found aflooif hut on a japanese base -- alive in this hut on a japanese base three miles from where he was last seen. the self-defense forces said a member unlocked the door to the building, and he was there. he asked if he was yamato, and he answered yes. the boy apparently found water to drink but didn't have food. another member said he was healthy, standing, and answering questions. yamato was reportedly hospitalized with mild dehydration and hypothermia. his father admit his punishment went too far. "i have poured all my life into my son. from now on, i would want to do more together with him. i would like it protect him while he grows up." and yamato's father said he originally lied because he was
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ashamed of what he and his wife had done. tokyo broadcasting system says the boy's parents will not face charges for negligence. >> they feel terrible enough i'm sure. they're very lucky. >> they are. >> i used to watch you on that other station. it's nice to have you at the table. >> great to be here. i love your instagram account, gayle. >> nice people here. i think you'll like us. >> i love it already. love it already. >> thank you. one woman shows us how she changed her airbnb profile to see if she could spot racism. we'll look at what a harvard business school report found. if you're heading out, guess what, you can watch us live through the cbs all-access app on your digital device. how does it work, gayle? >> it works really well. >> a look at the remarkable comeback of bison in yellowstone national park. look how beautiful. our new series, "america the beautiful." we'll be right back.
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airbnb is investigating claims of racism by some of its users. an airbnb host in north carolina is accused of sending vile
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messages to a business student. vladimir duthiers talked to another customer who claims she faced racism on the site several times. good morning. >> reporter: good morning. the latest incident involves a northwestern university student only identified as jane who needed a temporary place to stay in charlotte. she received messages apparently from the airbnb hosts that were so offensive the company decided to ban him for life. proclaiming this is the south, darling, a user identifying himself as todd warner, allegedly wrote, "find another place to rest your n-word head." the messages were posted on a blog by one of jane's friends. warner repeatedly cursed and used racist language despite jane telling him to stop. >> i was absolutely appalled. it was outrageous. >> reporter: chris lahane is the global head of policy for airbnb which tells the more than 80 million people who have used its service they belong anywhere. >> it's why we took immediate
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action and have a zillions -- a zero tolerance policy. >> it's terrible. it's part of become a black american. >> reporter: this chicago resident says she experienced racial bias on airbnb. she started the hash tag #airbnbwhileblack. >> it took me seven or eight times. each time i would get a random excuse from the host like, oh, it's booked, i decided to stay at my place this week. >> reporter: you got suspicious. then what did you do? >> that's when i changed my profile. i changed my photo to city escape in chicago. then i changed my name from cortina to just tina. after that, i never had issues. >> reporter: a harvard business school study confirmed what crittendon suspected -- airbnb guests with distinctly african-american names were about 16% less likely to be accepted than those with white
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names. >> the extent of discrimination is pretty persistent. it holds whether there's an african-american host or a white host. >> reporter: airbnb's opponents and competitors have even seized on the issue, releasing this commercial last month. >> i am a black woman. i get declined all the time on airb airbnb. >> reporter: the company says it has begun offering training to employees and hosts. laura murphy, a former top aclu official, will conduct a comprehensive review to make sure guests and hosts are being treated fairly. >> i really, really think -- a challenge that everyone in society that everyone is dealing with, but we want to do our part. >> reporter: do you still want to use airbnb, or has it turned you off? >> i have no problem with airbnb as a company, a service. i think they need to put action behind their words. >> reporter: airbnb hopes to complete their review by september. "cbs this morning" reached out to jane, the users in north carolina, but did not get a response. we also tried to contact the host, todd warner, but were unsuccessful. >> i would imagine todd warner
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isn't interested in talking. >> i think he's hiding. >> in 2016 -- >> what she said, it's not airbnb the company. >> it's not. >> that makes you sad, but it makes you angry. >> this makes me sad and angry. >> glad it's being exposed. >> me, too. thank you. people all over arizona said, what was that? it made the sky light up. nasa's explaining what that was
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about 40,000 miles an hour. one scientist says pieces of the asteroid almost certainly reached the ground. the space rock may have landed on native american reservation near tucson. amazing. >> yeah, beautiful stuff. bison in this country -- >> bison are beautiful, too. >> they are, and they're big. bison in this country, they were nearly wiped out, did you know that? how did they make a come back? our series, "america the beautiful," travels to yellowstone national park ahead on "cbs this morning." are we ready? >> all that -- >> and all that matters. >> i'm saying this. >> all that -- >> and all that matters. >> an impression of you. i'm charlie rose.
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>> all that -- >> all that matters. >> that was good. >> all that -- >> all that -- >> and all that matters. >> on cbs. >> on cbs. >> on "cbs this morning." >> how was that, charlie? >> as good as it's been done. >> all that and all that matters. all that matters. in a good, clean salad, is the main ingredient. whether it's big... or small. first to go. or best for last. sweet. or not so sweet. whether it's tossed... or twirled. if it's easy prey. or plays hard to get. every last crunch, sprinkle and drip... should be as clean as it is delicious. panera. food as it should be. oh hank, you look red. are you sunburned?no, dory. well, you do look red. i'm supposed to be red. and fish don't get sunburned. what! you're a fish? uhhhh.
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>> good morning, i'm jim donovan, dispute between neighbors sends nearly dozen bullets flying and a wild shoot-out overnight in west oaklane. at least ten shots were fired during a fight at the thorn avenue in washington lane, luckily, no one was hit. two people arrested, and police recovered two guns at the scene. now, here's kate way look at the weather forecast. >> the forecast, jim, unfortunately, little dreary, especially today, and also, for the second half of the weekend. but we will get bright spots in there for you, too. let's look what's happening on storm scan3, heaviest pocket of rain actually right over delco, and if the county. not everyone obviously getting hit by the rain, but anyone is fair game. we have moisture rich atmosphere at the moment. don't be shocked if you see some raindrops here, but, there may also and rumble every thunder along the way, too. tomorrow, other than a very
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spotty shower, expect partly sunny sky, sunday, does go downhill, however. with more widespread showers, and probably, even couple every stronger thunderstorms, pat, over to you. >> thank you, katie. tomorrow looking better than sunday. this not looking so good. this is 95 northbound, at girard, disable vehicle, in the left lane, blocking things, already tough coming around the curve as go northbound, this causing some delays there. this is mall boulevard, king of prussia mall, back out of the way, see the right lane blocked because of a water main break from yesterday, also, 422 eastbound clear. >> pat, next update is 8:25, coming up this morning, 100 years at the national park service, iconic species making a come back, i'm you scratch my back, i'll scratch yours.
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you know what it means. so does pat toomey. toomey got rich working on wall street. then he got elected and kept working, for wall street. voting to let banks continue their risky practices. and supporting huge tax breaks for millionaires, but higher taxes on working families. no wonder he's gotten millions from wall street. pat toomey. right for wall street. wrong for pennsylvania. senate majority pac is responsible for the content of this advertising.
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it is friday, june 3rd, 2016. welcome back to "cbs this morning." more real news ahead including angry protesters punching donald trump supporters after trump and hillary clinton traded some of their biggest shots of the campaign so far. we'll talk with correspondent jeffrey goldberg about clinton's new offensive. first, here's today's "eye opener" at 8:00. violent scuffles ensued. all fueled by antagonism and divisive rhetoric on both sides. >> trump did not take kindly to clinton's speech. he said if elected, he'll sick his attorney general on her, and that she should go to prison. >> the military's been using helicopters, rescue boats, and search and rescue dogs to try and find the missing servicemen.
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decorated member of the u.s. military, kuss was determined to inspire the next generation to reach new heights. sarkar left a note asking police to check on his cat in minnesota. it was there that they found his kill list. one of the questions is whether or not prince had a prescription for fentanyl, and if not, how did he get it? the boy's parents told japanese media their son wandered off but later changed their story, reportedly telling police they left their son by the side of the road as punishment. driven to right field. retreating -- still going back, and leaping and the ball off his glove, rolling to the corner. nunez flies around second, on his way to third. they're going to wave him around. nunez will score to start the ball game! i'm charlie rose with gayle king and norah o'donnell. another donald trump rally ended
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in chaos after he and hillary clinton blasted each other with some of the toughest talk we have seen in this campaign. trump supporters in san jose last night were chased, surrounded, and attacked by anti-trump protesters. punches were thrown in some of the scuffles. >> afterwards, donald trump responded with outrage to hillary clinton's scathing foreign policy attack and attacked her for using a private e-mail server as secretary of state. >> whatever she said about me in her phony speech, that was a phony speech -- that was a donald trump pit job. i will say this, hillary clinton has to go to jail, okay. she has to go to jail. >> earlier, hillary clinton said trump is "temperamental, temperamentally unfit to be president." >> it's not hard to imagine donald trump leading us into a war just because somebody got under his very thin skin. this is not someone who should
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ever have the nuclear codes. he praises dictators like vladimir putin and picks fights with our friends, including the british prime minister, the mayor of london, the german chancellor, the president of mexico, and the pope. he says he doesn't have to listen to our generals or admirals, our ambassadors and other high officials because he has "a very good brain." he also said, "i know more about isis than the generals do, believe me." you know what, i don't believe him. [ applause ] >> clinton said making the right decision requires a cool head and respect for the facts. with us is jeffrey goldberg, national correspondent for "the atlantic." earlier this year he interviewed president obama for a cover story about his foreign policy doctrine. welcome. >> thank you. >> is this perhaps a turning point for the clinton campaign in terms of the way she ridiculed donald trump? >> right. it absolutely is.
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yesterday was pivotal. she decided that this is not a traditional campaign, and therefore she's not going to take the traditional approach to a candidate. yesterday's speech was not really a foreign policy speech. it was more like a psychiatric indictment of her opponent. that is fairly unprecedented. certainly unpriecedented in jun. we're only in june, where does this thing go over the next five months? when you go nuclear yesterday, where does it go? >> when you think it was a point-by-point indictment, using his own words as evidence against him. >> she quoted him 41 separate times. using his words against him. >> and the idea that he is unfit to command, to be commander in chief. >> right. >> and control the nuclear codes. >> right. i think that what she's going to do over the next five months is keep hammering that point home. that this man is not mentally stable. that's why we're in this unprecedented moment. this wasn't -- you know, usually, this is the interesting thing to me, usually in a campaign, she would come out and
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give a foreign policy speech and say, he's an isolationist. she would say she wants to use the military too much or you're too liberal, too conservative. he was a candidate saying, i am sane, and he is insane. that was the frame. and that -- i can't remember -- in the '64 race, you had little of that, the goldwater/lbj. this was dialed up. >> we're well beyond that. >> dialed beyond that. >> what do you think that the clinton campaign is hoping will come out of it? she seemed to want to provoke him. normally when he's provoked, as he says, i strike back. >> right. this is the thing -- i think a number of things were happening. it was a foreign policy speech. it was, here's what he's done. it was an attempt to frame him as mentally unfit for office. it was also an attempt to goad him, to goad him into saying something irretrievably bad. >> like what? >> this is a family-friendly show. i'm not going to go where he can go. you know, i think that the goal is to get him so angry that he says something that reminds
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voters or tells voters that this guy -- >> what did we mean by irretrievably? we thought he's gone there before. >> right. we're all in deep water here. we're all in -- in the deep end of the pool. we as journalists and people who cover politics, we haven't really seen this yet. so i don't know where you go that's too far. i think the goal is to get him to make a mistake. >> she laid that out -- 41 points. she then sums up the speech and says, now, imagine donald trump sitting in the situation room making life-or-death decisions on behalf of the united states. imagine him sending your spouses or children into battle. imagine if he had not just had his twitter account at his disposal when he's angry but america's arsenal. it seems that they're trying to conjure up an image of this man in the white house. >> this is the goldwater. this is the -- the lbj play. lbj told the voters in 1964 that
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goldwater will cause a nuclear war that will kill your children. >> and added the nuclear explosion -- >> the famous daisy explosion. >> you've been talking to the clinton team. what do you think went on behind the scenes that they said we've got to change our strategy and tactics? >> a, she really wanted to do this. by the way, if you watch the speech, she was having a good time doing that. finally unleashing this. but i think they realize they're in a non-conventional campaign against a non-conventional, smart foe, and we're going to do this differently than we would if we were running against marco rubio or jeb bush. >> is it a turning point because finally this is a contest of ideas and not attacks? >> i saw fewer ideas than i did see ad hominem attacks. this was psychiatric analysis in the guise of foreign policy speech. >> how is she different from president obama in terms of her foreign policy? what does she want to do?
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>> look, she in many ways is the hawk in this race. she is much more hawkish, a more bias toward action than president obama. trump, the hard thing for hillary clinton, and this goes to your question, the hard thing is that he's coming at her, trump is coming at her from the left and right simultaneously. she's weak, and she uses the military too much. and so this is why i think she's trying to -- got to run around that and deal with him and deal with issues of stability and temperament rather than policy. yeah, she's definitely -- definitely on the spectrum. she's much more of an interventionist. much more of a great power person than obama. and in a different way than trump. >> it is interesting to watch. you will give us that. >> it's like five-car pileup. you keep watching even though you don't want to. >> thank you. >> great to have you here. >> thanks. glad to be here. could using emojis replace text messages?
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ahead, silicon valley's brightest minds predict how technology will impact our lives in the future. firs
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a hero of hope in america's back yard. >> i'm art straussman at yellowstone national park. it's one of the most remarkable wildlife conservation success stories ever. the resurgence of bison. and you'll hear what's so remarkable about their comeback coming up on "cbs this morning." i have asthma... ...one of mlife.ieces in my so when my asthma symptoms kept coming back on my long-term control medicine. i talked to my doctor and found a missing piece in my asthma treatment with breo. once-daily breo prevents asthma symptoms. breo is for adults with asthma not well controlled on a long-term asthma control medicine, like an inhaled corticosteroid. breo won't replace a rescue inhaler for sudden breathing problems. breo opens up airways to help improve breathing for a full 24 hours.
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♪ perfect music, bruce springsteen. our series, "america the beautiful," don't you like the sound of that, celebrates 100 years of the national parks service. one of its many protected animals, the bison, was recently designated by congress as the nation's first official ma'am amp not long ago, the icon -- mammal. not long ago, the iconic frontier nearly disappeared from the landscape. we have the remarkable comeback story of one truly wild herd. >> reporter: few places make you feel in this world like
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yellowstone. its timelessness spreads to the horizon. here is where the bear and the antelope play, but the bison dominates. you're looking at what may be the last free-ranging purebred herd of wild bison in north america. >> you look at the valley full of bison. it's primitive america. it's probably as close as you can get to what this part of the country looked like in the early 1700s and 1800s. and it's really -- a treasure. >> reporter: dan wenk is superintendent at yellowstone national park. bison roam its 2.2 million acres, an area nearly as big as rhode island and delaware combined. but little about scale impresses america's largest land animal. a mature bison bull stands six-feet tall and can weigh more than a ton. >> that's formidable. there's not many fullbacks who would like to approach that line. >> reporter: so imposing and yet
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they almost disappeared. how dire did it get? >> in yellowstone national park, there were less than 2 5 animal. it is one of the greatest conservation stories in the history of the united states. >> reporter: here's why the conservation comeback is so remarkable. in the 1800s, as many as 6 million bison were hunted nearly into extinction. 60 million. they were targets and the ugly side of how the west was won. the american bison, the symbol of the great plains. once roamed from nevada to mississippi. in the 1800s, pioneers pushed west. bison were in the way. tens of millions were killed by cattle ranchers, homesteaders, and u.s. troops, sport hunters shot bison from moving trains. as the animals disappeared, so did the native american tribes who for centuries had relied on bison for food, clothing, shelter, and tools.
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>> we don't call them bison. we call them buffalo. >> reporter: because? >> we think of as bison as white man term. >> reporter: montana rancher irvin carlson belongs to the black feet tribe. heels also president of the -- he's also president of the intercontinental buffalo council, representing tribes who believe bison have great spiritual significance. >> we drived on them. they took care of us. >> reporter: what was the great buffalo slaughter about to you? >> if you got rid of the buffalo, consequently you would get rid of the indian. >> reporter: by 1883, nearly all bison were gone. congress even sent soldiers to yellowstone to protect the final survivors from poachers. conservationists including president teddy roosevelt intervened to protect and restore the population. roughly 5,000 bison live at yellowstone today. this comeback story, how
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improbable was it? >> it was really the first effort to restore what could have been an endangered species. >> reporter: the park's chief bison biologist oversees a unique herd. >> you can't see this kind of abundance anywhere else. >> reporter: most of america's roughly half million bison today are managed as domestic livestock. many have crossbred with cattle, not yellowstone's herd. >> yellowstone bison probably represent one of the only populations that truly have all of the kind of ecological and evolutionary drivers that shape the species. this is as good as it get. >> reporter: this is also the herd's calving season which brings us to yellowstone's current bison challenge and controversy. managing the herd's growth. when the bison migrant outside the park -- migrate outside the park, neighboring ranchers have killed them. they say they're worried the animals will spread a disease harmful to pregnant cattle. inside the park has grazing
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limits. under a federal state agreement, every year the herd has to be reduced by about 10%. several hundred get sent for processing to tribes which distribute the hydes and meat. does it make you feel good? >> it does. >> reporter: the current approach seems to satisfy no one including irvin carlson who also belongs to the bison management coalition. he says these animals should roam free inside and outside the park or be returned to what he calls indian country. >> they're wildlife. they belong on the land. they belong to the land. they're part of land. >> reporter: they're also part of yellowstone's future. >> i think there is a middle ground. we can get more bison on the landscape. we can diminish, eliminate the fear of the spread of the disease, and we can honor the cultural significance of bison for the native american community. >> reporter: think of it as a way of making peace with the
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past for an american icon. for "cbs this morning," mark straussman at yellowstone national park. >> i'm on the bison's side. >> me, too. with irv carlson, let the bufalo roam. beautiful. majestic animals. ahead, a remarkable feat of endurance. the man who survived 20 hours in the gulf of mexico without a life jacket. you're watching "cbs this morning." that's not fair, he should give you your rollerblades back. and, she's back. storm coming? a very dangerous cheese storm. presenting the american express blue cash everyday card with cash back on this. mouth toys. that really takes me back. cash back on this. baloney and medical gauze.
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a 61-year-old man survived a boating mishap by treading water for 20 years. the coast guard copter spotted him yesterday in the gulf of mexico about 18 miles from the florida coast. he was not wearing a life vest when he fell from his boat wednesday. durdin was checked over at the coast guard base and is a-okay. >> he credits his navy training for getting him through that for 20 hours. sglrthwise his arms -- >> otherwise his arms would have been very tired. >> another reminder, wear your life vests on a boat, even if you're a good swimmer. snapchat could be the future of communication. how the social media app is
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overtaking twitter and facebook, >> good morning, center city sprucing up for the summerall part of the first day celebration, trees, rose bushes will be planted today, ben franklin franklin also on hands planting the final tree. permanent gift to the square, as part of the year long celebration. >> definitely seeing some rain, that's for sure, and it is coming through maybe where you are, rain pushing its way across philadelphia. umbrellas required, if you are headed out in the city at the
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moment. but, you know, even into this evening, this frontal boundery, those it is weakening, still going to trigger shower maybe thunderstorm, and we keep that in the forecast for tonight, against the but ers in south philly, phillies hit about 71 degrees, at first pitch. meanwhile, moving forward in this forecast, expecting temperatures to rebounds back to the low and mid 80s, through the weekend, saturday looks pretty good. nothing more than stray shower, key word, stray. but by sunday, we all get hit with some showers, and maybe even some stronger storms with the next front. >> bumper for the the manayunk bike race, they'll have to track through that, 422 eastbound past route 29, an accident here, off to the shoulder, that is slowing some things down, many see it is slowing down beyond that, being told that's normal volume for this time of the morning, so not accident there. but there is one right here. also, ground stop at the airport, for all arrivals and phl departures, may also be affected so be sure to check your carrier before you head to the airport, also, tomorrow, kelly drive, closed,
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brooke? >> thanks, pat. next update is at 85:00, a ahead on cbs this morning, biggest innovate orson the way we will communicate. i'm brooke thomas. good morning. jump 50 feet over the rapids and i crash land. check out my scar. there's nothing there! you didn't jump the creek! there's a new neosporin antibiotic that minimizes scars. new neosporin plus pain itch scar
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we love to show you this stuff. the giant panda cub born yesterday at a zoo outside brussels, belgium. officials say this little boy is doing just fine so far. they're watching closely because the first few month are critical. it's the first successful panda birth in europe for three years. one of the zookeepers says, i just want to cry, it's so moving. okay, i'm like, i want to see it -- this he is. >> he looks like he's going to eat it. i saw a still picture and thought is she eating the baby? >> they're grow looking when they're that little. >> yeah. they say -- >> all pink, ugh. kind of gross. >> they get cute later. >> yes. >> they say that when they're born, they're like a stick of butter, the size. >> so little and grow to be so big. >> but did the mother have the baby in her mouth? >> yes. yeah.
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>> yeah. >> thought the mother was going to eat the baby because the baby was in her mouth. >> yes. >> there. >> that's the affectionate panda move. >> see, right this in the mouth. there it is. >> a panda kiss. >> okay. >> just using her tongue to wash the baby. >> that's creeping me out a little. >> no, i don't find it creepy at all. >> i think it's creepy. >> we need to ask an expert. welcome back to "cbs this morning." coming up in this half hour -- >> it's love, y'all. >> it is love. can't get too much of it, i say. is the world beginning to move on from the internet? >> what did you say? >> didn't say anything. >> oh, i thought you said, i syw that every night. >> that is what he said, gayle. >> can you roll the prompter back? i missed a lot. >> it's hard to focus after he starts talking. >> very much so. i'm focusing now. is the world beginning to move on from the internet? one of the predictions from this week's co-conference from an influential leader in the tech industry. digital expert nick thompson is
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back again. nicholas is here in the green room. hello, nicholas thompson. >> i thought he was an editor. now he's a digital expert. >> yes, he has many titles, this man. how videos and emortgagies could change the -- emojis could change the way we communicate. and ahead, "48 hours" looks at how a battle led close to home. time to show the headlines from around the globe. "the denver post" reports on an american cyclist believed to be the first athlete to back out of the real olympics because of zika concerns. tj van good guteran is pulling his name from the games. his wife is pregnant, and he does not want to take chances. zika is linked to severe birth defect. >> interesting to see how many make that decision. the "washington post" reports on the possibility that alaska could have two dan sullivans in the u.s. in it next year. so how that possible? here you go. republican senator dan sullivan is currently serving, and this
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week, a former anchorage mayor, also named dan sullivan, filed papers to run in the gop primary this summer. he will be challenging republican senator lisa murkowsky. >> hope people remember their names. britain's "telegraph" reports on prince harry for being called out for going to a d-day event for vets with no tie. >> i'm underdressed. >> after giving harry an earful, 91-year-old ivor anderson offered him a spare tie. harry said he didn't have his military qualifications. the veterans are preparing to go to normandy next week to mark the anniversary of the allied invasion. >> gentle ribbing. >> ribbing. >> i thought so, too. >> i was saying, would you like it wear my terry? where's your blood -- my tie? where's you're bloody tie. he was kidding.
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mostly. "the hollywood reporter" says the founding father of "hamilton" will leave the hit. his contract is up on july 9th. he create d and composed the musical. he's been the star performer since the off broadway debut last year. he has an idea for a new musical and will be in the upcoming "mary poppins" sequel. >> we'll see that. and bloomberg news report that snapchat is now more popular than twitter. the messaging service reportedly has 150 million daily users. that's more than ten million more than twitter. snatch was launched just four -- snapchat was launched just four years ago starting with the vanishing photofeature. use up 35%. social media just one aspect of technology changing the way we live. silicon valley's biggest innovators are sharing ideas about what could be in the future.
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renowned venture capitalist mary meeker presented her annual trends forecast at the codes conference. she predicted a downturn in internet news and predicted an upswing in the internet and emojis. >> others spoke about where technology can take the world. >> i'm using my resources to put in place heavy lifting infrastructure so that the next generation of people can have a dynamic entrepreneurial explosion into space. >> 40 years ago we had pong. two rectangles and a dot. soon we'll have virtual reality. >> and we'll have for physical tasks driving, warehouse work, cleaning up rooms. we'll have robots that are way less expensive than human labor for doing those things. >> every technology presents challenges, of course there are things to be worried about. we have a responsibility, any of
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us who are developing it. but we live, we all live longer, healthier, better lives because of technology. and we believe in that progress. >> cbs news contributor nicholas thompson is the editor of the "new yorker's" website, newyorker.com. interesting to hear mary meeker's internet trends report. she says video is dominating while the internet is experiencing a downturn. explain that. >> a downturn in growth. the internet is not growing as fast as it was. there's a huge shift from text to video. that's happening for a number of reasons. in the early days when bandwidth is slow and storage is limited, text is the way to communicate. now we have massive bandwidth and great connections, people love images. the major tech companies notice that people engage and interact with images more than they do with text. there's a massive, massive, massive shift to the visual web now. >> the interesting thing, though, is that the internet still has plenty of room to grow. a lot of people in the world do
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not have access. >> right. in fact, mary meeker started her presentation by talking about the growth in india. massive right now. >> and in africa. >> we talked about snapchat surpassing twitter. is this a big deal, number one, and is twitter worried or should they be worried? >> twitter is terrified, they're not terrify good snapchat passing them -- terrified about snapchat passing them, they're terrified about the users. the company is in trouble. it's an important company. a company with a terrific tenure history. the fact that snapchat has passed it, snapchat has been around for four years is, a bad indication. >> not just daily users. we're talking about views. snapchat has more than ten billion daily video views. facebook has eight billion. incredible. >> right. what snapchat has, it has all the young people. the 13 to 17-year-olds. you think about habits being formed and the social networks to which they have an affinity over to which they will have an affinity for a long time, that's a good sign for snapchat and a disconcerting one for everybody else. >> i signed on yesterday. i'm trying to figure it out.
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>> snapchat is owned by snapchat, by the founders of snapchat. >> it resisted an offer from facebook. >> a $3 billion offer from facebook when it had zero revenue. amazing. >> a very smart decision. >> are people still going to be talking on the freaking phone? a phone call with a voice on the other snide witho-- other side without an emoji or text? >> i'll call you this afternoon. >> you never call. you have my number. >> there's a great slide in the presentation that basically shows that young people do not talk on the phone. in the future, we will talk to our computers, and we will type to each other. a massive change -- >> and the universe. sorry. >> say what you said -- >> you will talk to computers and type to each other. that's basically what young people do. >> norah's right, not good news. >> no. >> and i hear there are bacon emojis on the way. did you know that? thank you. >> i look forward to it. ahead, the final judgment in a case that shattered a family.
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>> reporter: i'm susan spencer, "48 hours." a prominent salt lake city cancer researcher is found dead in her bathtub. her son helps make sure the man he thinks is responsible stands trial for murder. that man, his own father. coming up on "cbs this morning."
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tomorrow now, "48 hours" looks at a story of a research scientist that was killed by uta von schwedler's dad. he went out to prove it and he did. we have more on the story pitting fourth against son for four years. here's a preview on the emotional final chapter. >> reporter: oldest son was there front and center and witnessed his father enter dressed if prison blues, handcuffs, and election shackles. >> -- and leg shackles. >> after the divorce, he became more confrontational with my mother. >> please step forward and tell me anything you'd like me to consider in making my sentencing decision today. >> reporter: pele told the courtroom how his father's fatal decision had caused so much damage. >> the fact that my father
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clearly premeditated my own mother's murder, making incomprehensible judgment that she was not fit to live, is something i will have to carry for the rest of my life. >> reporter: on september 27th, 2011, uta's boyfriend found her lifeless body drowned in her ba bathtub. >> tapped on the door and said hello, opened the door, and there she was under water. >> reporter: uta had superficial knifewounds and a high level of the anti-anxiety medication xanax in her system. did her ex-husband somehow force her to take it, or did she take it herself? >> she was at about twice a therapeutic level. it is clearly enough to makeler drowsy, maybe render her unconscious. if she's trying to get into a bathtub, it's not that hard to drown. >> reporter: the doctor's account of time was sketchy. he had an eye injury that night that he blamed on his dog.
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>> as i thought about my dad's behavior before and after her death, it became more and more apparent that he was responsible for killing her. >> if you'd like to come to the podium, i'd be happy to hear anything you'd like to say. >> reporter: johnny wahl, the former pediatrician, finally would break his silence with a message for his children. >> i can no longer assist them and support them in achieving their hopes and dreams. nor can i comfort them in their times of need. i can only hope that they know how much i love them unconditionally, absolutely. >> reporter: he emphatically denied any involvement in his ex-wife's death. >> i did not kill uta. i am numbers. >> the jury found a chilling and despicable crime. >> reporter: pela does not expect his father ever to admit to killing his mother. >> he's created his own truth.
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i don't think he's going to change that. >> a week before his death, uta made a breakthrough with her childhood leukemia. her son plans to be a doctor like his father. more tomorrow on "48 hours," a double feature. it starts at 9:00, 8:00 central, on cbs. we'll be right back.
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we want to congratulate our colleague, scott pelley on, five years of anchoring "the cbs evening news." >> go, scott pelley! >> and the highest rankings in a decade. tune in tonight. as we leave you, let's take a look at all that mattered this week. have a great weekend. >> congrats, scott pelley! mr. donald ju. trump! >> this sleazy guy from abc. he's a sleaze. >> reporter: why am i a sleaze?
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i've watched you on television. you're a real beauty. >> don't you believe you should be accountable to the people? >> i'm totally accountable. >> is this what it's going to be like if you're president? >> yeah, it is going to be like this, david. >> he picks fights with our friends. the british prime minister, german chancellor, president of mexico, and the pope. >> clinton is hoping for a decisive win. >> secretary clinton has won. that is incorrect. >> lapd officers, the fbi, even the atf flooded this campus. the shooter is receding. the water has topped 54 feet. >> you afraid it's going to flood completely? >> a little bit, yeah. the young boy's safety was paramount. the animal was so strong. >> there's a male gorilla standing over my son. >> a human being is alive because a decision was made. fierce fight for fallujah shows no sign of a letup. >> audience members were more interested in a good photo than a live performance. >> please stop filming with me with the video camera because
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i'm here in real life. a moose on the loose in massachusetts in two towns. a photographer captured her reaction. she was told that she gave birth to a baby boy. she'd been expecting a little girl. this is a president who doesn't have a clue. >> why don't you mention donald trump by name? >> he seems to do a good job mentioning his own name. ♪ [ cheers ] >> we went up to 27,000 feet. i could tell i couldn't quite keep up. >> pretty special to be here together. i'm happy you could make it this time. >> subtle. >> yeah. >> i'll crawl on top of the table. [ applause ] you will! >> to know that your students puts you out there -- >> to consider me for something like that is kind of special. can't decide whose tennis
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shoes i like better. between you and -- like charlie's better, bye, frank. there are certain golf courses where you know not to try and retrieve your bottle -- your ball. >> first your bottle, then your ball. >> what you thinking about, norah? >> they don't have bottles on golf course, as you know. just cans. oh, no! [ laughter ] all that -- >> this case was gentle and urgent, hard and soft at the same time. wide right. >> wait until you get to it again -- >> would you stay again? >> wide ride in a yellow dress. the hair by everest thing was such a funny hash tag. this is #hairbyeverest. there you go.
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you look like adrian. ♪
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>> good morning, get ready to raise your glass, the start of philly beer week, starts tonight, on tap at the philmore. >> and today, lots of clouds out there, as well as lots of weather to dodge. storm scan3, at the moment, basically bull's eye snack dab if the center of the radar, little pocket of rain, it was heavier in the last few hours, you can see how that's somewhat fizzled down in terms every intensity, regardless, light rain still falling here, not only at the cbs broadcast center but really, just region wide, across the greater philadelphia region. storm threat today, as well, we could see, you know, quick
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run of the mill thunderstorm rumble through. i don't and the dissipate severe weather, thankfully, just not instability to work w regardless the rest of the day will feature shower, thunderstorm, so, again, very limited sunshine. tomorrow does look good, though. save for very spotty shower, you can expect partly sunny day, miler, low 80s, sunday, little rain, and we'll keep you posted might even see stronger storms, as well. >> some of the wet weather on the roadways, 422, eastbound, at route 29, there is an accident, that's been off to the left shoulder, for the past hour or so, causing little bit of slow down, as you head that way. also, the blue route, some heavy volume going northbound, basically, between 95 and route one entire lent of the span, a lot of traffic in that area, and take a look at the wide map, as you see, at the bottom, grounds stop at the airport, for flights coming in, it is affecting some flights going out, as women. as you see, slow on the
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schuylkill, 7 miles per hour, and 15 miles an hour head for the city on 95. jim, over to you. >> thanks so much, pat. that's "eyewitness news" for now. remember to join us for "eyewitness news" today at noon. i'm jim donovan, make it a great day.
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>> she wowed millions with a sassy viral video. >> there's another story no one knew about! now in a doctor's exclusive, the family opens up about a medical struggle they have been trying to cope with for years. >> we can't imagine how this happened. >> these parents are inflicting abuse upon their children for personal gain. >> announcer: plus, the hard-hitting new way to relieve your stress! ahhhh! >> on the doctors! [ crowd cheering ] [ applause ] ♪ >> dr. travis: welcome, everyone, to the show. our first story might be the solution for you stressed-out parents. it's all the rage. it's called a "rage room". you suit up, grab a baseball bat, go into a special room, and you can break anything you want! they're popping up all over the place. rage rooms are in texas, canada, europe. reportedly rapper

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